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garden beds. She has trouble navigating a walker in her small mobile home. She feels that she has adequate support from her daughter and sees her daily. Working together with her home health nurse and the clinic pharmacist, a complete and accurate medication list is obtained. At a close follow‐up visit, you review each medication against the Beers list and weigh the potential benefits against probable medication burden/side effects, prioritizing drugs for discontinuation. Together with the patient and daughter, you agree on a monitoring plan to watch for any adverse events related to deprescribing.

      The following medications are discontinued due to the Beers list strong recommendation to avoid use in older adults and the presence of symptoms that suggest ADR: meclizine, nifedipine, glimepiride, high‐dose aspirin (for primary prevention), and omeprazole. After evaluating for drug–drug and drug–disease interactions, it is decided to also discontinue oxybutynin (anticholinergic effects and possible interaction with donepezil), multivitamin (drug absorption interactions and limited evidence of benefit), spironolactone (drug–drug interaction with ACE inhibitor), nadolol (orthostatic hypotension and bradycardia contributing to fall), calcium (constipation and drug absorption interactions), and cilostazol (lack of indication). Dose optimization to reduce the risk of side effects and simplify the medication regimen to once‐daily dosing in the a.m. is done for the following: furosemide once daily (reduce urinary symptoms), metformin changed to ER formulation once daily, simvastatin 20 mg (reduce muscle aches), ferrous sulfate once daily (constipation), and calcium carbonate once daily (constipation). A plan for gradual dose reduction of trazodone, sertraline, and famotidine is initiated. A review of the START criteria indicates that the patient should be treated with vitamin D3 for her osteoporosis. The patient admits to not taking tramadol, so this medication is also discontinued. Non‐pharmacologic interventions of compression stockings, dietician guidance for optimal calcium and protein intake, and a therapist‐led exercise programme are initiated. A discussion is held on the risks versus benefit of statin therapy in diabetes and donepezil in probable early Alzheimer’s disease, and the decision is made to continue these with close monitoring.

      Final medication list: lisinopril 5 mg daily, furosemide 20 mg daily, metformin ER 1000 mg daily, simvastatin 20 mg daily, sertraline 75 mg daily, trazodone gradually tapered off over four weeks, donepezil 10 mg daily, ferrous sulfate 325 mg daily, and vitamin D3 1000 units daily.

      Her home health interprofessional team makes frequent visits over the next month. At six months, she and her daughter report that she is living independently and continuing to improve functionally, cognitively, and symptomatically with no additional falls.

      Key points

       Inappropriate medication prescribing is a significant problem in geriatrics and should be evaluated in each and every medical encounter.

       The presence of multiple medications in older patients is associated with higher risk for frailty, disability, mortality, and falls.

       In the geriatric population, responses to medications can be very variable and not always predictable at the time of medication prescription.

       An elderly patient’s protein status must be taken into account when assessing medication efficacy or toxicity.

       Prescribers must always consider new symptom complaints in an older patient as a potential medication reaction, even if atypical.

       Many resources and tools are available to guide appropriate medication prescribing in the older adult, and prescribers should use them regularly.

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